Too Too
Too Too (Burmese: တူးတူး; born October 1990 – 26 April 2023) was a Myanmar Lethwei fighter who competed in the World Lethwei Championship (WLC), a bare-knuckle martial arts promotion.[1][2] He achieved the WLC middleweight championship and secured multiple knockout victories, establishing himself as one of the sport's most formidable competitors known for his aggressive striking and power.[3] Following the 2021 military coup in Myanmar, Too Too participated in anti-junta protests, leading to his arrest by security forces in Magway Region in April or May 2022.[4] He reportedly died in military custody on 26 April 2023 from injuries sustained during interrogation and torture, with his family notified months later.[2][5]
Personal Background
Early Life and Entry into Combat Sports
Too Too was born in October 1990 in Bu Kyun village, Yenanchaung city, within Myanmar's Magway Region.[1] Public records on his early family circumstances or precise socioeconomic background remain limited, reflecting the relative obscurity of personal details for many Burmese fighters prior to international exposure.[1] Lethwei, Myanmar's indigenous full-contact martial art with roots tracing to ancient kingdoms such as those depicted in Bagan temple carvings from the 11th-13th centuries, provided the cultural backdrop for Too Too's introduction to combat sports.[6] He entered the discipline under the guidance of coach Kyaw Soe, a former lethwei practitioner, beginning training that focused on the sport's distinctive bare-knuckle format, allowance of headbutts, and demands for physical endurance typical of local Myanmar gyms.[1][7] This foundational period aligned with lethwei's emphasis on unadorned techniques—punches, kicks, elbows, knees, and clinch work—forged in environments where fighters build resilience through repetitive, high-intensity drills without gloves or padded protection.[7]Professional Fighting Career
Rise in Lethwei and Key Matches
Too Too began his professional Lethwei career in 2010, rapidly ascending as a middleweight contender in Myanmar's bare-knuckle circuit due to his devastating knockout power—securing 34 of his 39 career victories by TKO/KO—and remarkable endurance in prolonged, high-impact exchanges.[8] His early fights emphasized aggressive forward pressure and resilience against local adversaries, establishing him as a dominant force in domestic promotions by the mid-2010s, with an undefeated streak reaching 36 bouts.[9] A landmark match occurred on August 21, 2016, when Too Too faced Canadian newcomer Dave Leduc in a Lethwei World Championship bout at Thuwunna Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar, ending in a hard-fought draw after five rounds.[10] Leduc, making his Lethwei debut, tested Too Too with grappling attempts and counters, but Too Too's defensive head movement, clinch work, and counterstriking neutralized many advances, preventing a finish despite Leduc's volume.[9] The fight's intensity and Too Too's ability to maintain composure under international scrutiny elevated his profile, introducing Lethwei's brutality to broader audiences via highlights and coverage.[11] Too Too's involvement in World Lethwei Championship (WLC) events from 2016 onward further honed his veteran poise, with appearances against diverse opponents that highlighted his adaptability in bare-knuckle rules emphasizing headbutts and elbows.[12] By 2021, at age 30, he had amassed over 60 professional bouts, cementing a reputation for overpowering regional challengers through superior striking volume and recovery from punishment, positioning him as a cornerstone of Lethwei's growing competitive scene.[12]Championships and International Exposure
Too Too achieved prominence in lethwei by capturing the 75 kg Golden Belt in 2015, a prestigious symbol of mastery under traditional Myanmar rules requiring undefeated status in bareknuckle bouts with headbutts permitted.[13] This accomplishment followed a streak of victories in domestic competitions, establishing him as a national standout with a professional record that reached 34 wins without a loss in lethwei prior to international challenges.[14] His credentials extended to the World Lethwei Championship (WLC), where he claimed the middleweight world title and defended it successfully, including a unanimous decision retention against Ukrainian challenger Vasyl Sorokin in a bout showcasing his pressure fighting and knockout power.[15] Another defense came against Australian Michael Badato in 2017, solidifying his status amid WLC's efforts to professionalize the sport with global matchmaking.[16] These victories, rooted in empirical dominance—evidenced by high finish rates in strikes and clinch work—elevated lethwei's visibility beyond Myanmar by drawing international opponents and audiences to the discipline's unfiltered intensity. On the international stage, Too Too gained exposure through a superfight at Kunlun Fight 25 on May 15, 2015, held in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia, where he faced Slovak kickboxer Igor Daniš in a 75 kg bout adapted to rules prohibiting headbutts.[17] The contest ended in a draw after three rounds, demonstrating his versatility in a gloved kickboxing format while introducing lethwei's raw aggression to European promoters and fans unfamiliar with bareknuckle traditions.[18] This rare venture outside Asia underscored lethwei's potential for crossover appeal, as Too Too's performance highlighted adaptive striking without relying on the sport's signature unrestricted techniques.Context of the 2021 Myanmar Coup
Election Disputes and Military Intervention
The National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Aung San Suu Kyi, secured a supermajority in Myanmar's November 8, 2020, general election, winning 396 of 476 contested seats in the Pyithu Hluttaw (lower house).[19] The Tatmadaw, Myanmar's military, contested the results, alleging widespread electoral fraud by the Union Election Commission (UEC), including duplicate voter registrations, invalid votes, and the disenfranchisement of approximately 5 million voters, particularly in ethnic minority areas where voter lists were reportedly incomplete or manipulated.[19] Tatmadaw-led audits identified around 10.5 million instances of irregularities across townships, such as non-resident voting and ballot stuffing, which they argued invalidated the NLD's victory and threatened constitutional governance.[19] These claims were echoed by the military-aligned Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which documented over 1,000 specific fraud cases and called for a revote.[20] On February 1, 2021, the Tatmadaw seized control, detaining Suu Kyi and President U Win Myint, and Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing declared a one-year state of emergency under Article 417 of the 2008 Constitution, which empowers the military to assume governing authority in cases of national disunity or threats to sovereignty.[21] The intervention was framed as a temporary measure to audit the election, annul fraudulent results, and restore electoral integrity through a supervised revote, citing the UEC's failure to address irregularities as a breach of constitutional order.[22] Article 418 further authorized the extension of the emergency if necessary, with the Tatmadaw asserting that civilian mismanagement had eroded national security and justified military oversight to prevent unconstitutional rule.[22] Prior to the coup, the NLD administration faced domestic and international scrutiny for centralizing power, including attempts to amend electoral laws perceived as reducing military influence, alongside economic challenges like stagnant growth amid the COVID-19 pandemic and reliance on foreign aid curtailed by sanctions.[23] The government's handling of the 2017 Rakhine State operations—military clearances following attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), resulting in over 700,000 Rohingya displacements—drew UN accusations of genocide but was domestically defended as targeted counter-insurgency against militants, contributing to Western sanctions that isolated Myanmar economically.[23] These factors, combined with alleged electoral lapses, underpinned the Tatmadaw's rationale for intervention to safeguard constitutional provisions allocating 25% of parliamentary seats to military appointees and ensuring balanced governance.[21]Competing Narratives on the Coup's Legitimacy
The Myanmar military, known as the Tatmadaw, justified the February 1, 2021, coup by citing alleged widespread electoral fraud in the November 8, 2020, general election, which the National League for Democracy (NLD) won by a landslide with approximately 83% of contested seats.[24] Pro-military narratives emphasized empirical irregularities, including duplicate voter registrations and discrepancies in voter lists affecting over 10 million names across thousands of precincts, as documented in preliminary investigations by the Union Election Commission (UEC) prior to the coup; these claims posited that such anomalies, occurring in a majority of townships, undermined the election's integrity and risked exacerbating ethnic divisions in a nation with over 135 recognized ethnic groups prone to fragmentation.[25] Advocates of this view, including Tatmadaw spokespersons, argued that the military's intervention preserved national stability, drawing on its historical role since the 1962 coup—which followed post-independence civil strife after 1948—in centralizing authority to suppress insurgencies and foster a unified state amid ongoing ethnic armed conflicts that have persisted for decades. However, these assertions lack comprehensive independent verification, with international observers like the Carter Center reporting no systemic fraud sufficient to alter outcomes despite acknowledging localized voter list errors.[26] Opposing narratives, prevalent in Western media and NLD-aligned accounts, framed the coup as an illegitimate authoritarian seizure that eroded democratic progress, pointing to the absence of substantiated fraud evidence from neutral bodies and the military's detention of NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other officials without due process.[27] Critics of the anti-coup perspective highlight its selective emphasis, often overlooking the NLD government's own centralizing measures, such as restrictions on media coverage of sensitive issues and failure to prosecute high-level corruption despite endemic scandals involving state resources, which persisted under NLD rule from 2015 to 2021.[28] Sources advancing the anti-coup view, including reports from outlets like BBC and Al Jazeera, tend to align with institutional biases favoring pro-democracy rhetoric, potentially downplaying causal factors like the NLD's inadequate addressing of ethnic federalism demands that fueled pre-coup tensions; nonetheless, even sympathetic analyses concede that the 2020 vote met basic standards amid COVID-19 constraints, rendering the military's proportionality claims contentious.[29] Post-coup developments have intensified debates, with violence escalating beyond initial demonstrations into armed clashes involving resistance groups, resulting in mutual casualties: human rights monitors documented over 6,300 civilian deaths primarily attributed to security forces by mid-2023, while Tatmadaw reports indicate thousands of military and police fatalities from ambushes, bombings, and arson attacks by protesters and ethnic militias, challenging portrayals of unrest as uniformly peaceful.[30][31] This bidirectional conflict, displacing millions and disrupting infrastructure, underscores causal realities of retaliatory cycles rather than one-sided repression, though data from groups like the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED) reveal disproportionate civilian impacts from junta airstrikes and raids, without equivalent scrutiny of non-state actor tactics in many Western-sourced tallies.[32] Independent audits of election disputes remain elusive, leaving legitimacy assessments mired in partisan interpretations amid Myanmar's entrenched ethnic and institutional fractures.Involvement in Post-Coup Demonstrations
Participation in Protests
Too Too joined anti-coup demonstrations in Myanmar's Magway region following the military's seizure of power on February 1, 2021.[33] His participation aligned with broader civil disobedience campaigns, including public gatherings and work stoppages organized against the junta's administration.[8] As a nationally recognized Lethwei champion from Yenanchaung in Magway, Too Too's visibility in these events contributed to elevating protester morale amid widespread opposition.[1] These activities took place against a backdrop of protests that transitioned from largely peaceful assemblies to instances of organized resistance, such as road blockades and strikes, with documented reports of clashes and property disruptions in various regions preceding intensified security force responses.[34][35]Accusations of Weapons Possession
The Myanmar military authorities claimed that weapons and explosives were found in Too Too's possession during a raid on his home in Minbu Township, Magway Region, on April 11, 2022, framing the arrest as targeting an individual linked to armed resistance rather than solely peaceful dissent.[8] This allegation emerged amid intelligence reports of opposition networks stockpiling arms in central Myanmar, where post-coup demonstrations had increasingly incorporated improvised explosives and firearms by mid-2021, escalating from initial non-violent actions. Precedents included Mandalay clashes in March 2021, where protesters deployed molotov cocktails against security forces, contributing to over 100 fatalities in urban confrontations by April 2021. Independent verification of the seized items remains unavailable, as junta-controlled investigations rarely permit external scrutiny, and opposition-aligned reporting often emphasizes torture or extrajudicial motives over such charges. The accusation aligns with a broader pattern of preemptive detentions against perceived insurgents, including figures suspected of ties to nascent People's Defense Forces (PDF) units, which by 2022 had integrated former protesters into armed operations against military outposts in Sagaing and Magway regions. While military sources assert these measures prevented destabilizing violence, critics attribute them to suppressing dissent without due process, though the absence of photographic or forensic evidence for Too Too's case underscores credibility challenges inherent to one-sided state narratives in conflict settings.Arrest, Detention, and Death
Circumstances of Arrest
On April 11, 2022, Too Too was detained by Tatmadaw (Myanmar military) forces at his residence in Minbu Township, Magway Region, during security operations aimed at individuals suspected of organizing or participating in anti-coup activities.[2] [36] Reports indicate the arrest followed his involvement in post-coup demonstrations, with photographs emerging shortly after showing Too Too blindfolded and kneeling alongside five other men in military custody, suggesting a group apprehension.[2] The military accused Too Too of weapons possession in connection with anti-regime agitation, aligning with broader counter-insurgency efforts under laws designating certain resistance actions as terrorism.[8] This occurred amid escalating crackdowns in Magway Region, a hotspot for People's Defense Force (PDF) activities formed in opposition to the February 2021 coup, as junta forces intensified raids on suspected protest networks.[2] Family members were informed of the detention, though access was reportedly restricted in line with standard procedures for such cases.[4]Conditions in Custody and Reported Cause of Death
Too Too was detained by Myanmar's military on April 11, 2022, and reportedly died in custody on April 26, 2022, with associates and local media alleging severe beatings and inhumane conditions as the cause.[2][5] These claims, disseminated through Myanmar-based outlets and fighter networks, describe physical torture including repeated assaults shortly after arrest, leading to fatal injuries amid overcrowded and unsanitary detention facilities typical of post-coup military interrogations.[2] However, no independent forensic examination or autopsy results have been publicly released, as military authorities maintain control over such processes in conflict-affected areas, limiting empirical verification.[37][38] Human rights documentation from 2022 highlights a broader pattern of deaths in military custody, with over 100 cases attributed to torture, denial of medical care, or excessive force during arrests, often in facilities lacking basic sanitation or oversight.[37][38] The U.S. State Department's 2022 report notes arbitrary detentions involving beatings and electrocution, while the military has consistently denied systematic abuse, claiming fatalities result from pre-existing health issues, self-inflicted injuries, or complications from resisting arrest rather than custodial mistreatment.[38] In Too Too's case, the absence of prompt body release—family notification delayed until months later—precluded timely independent assessment, exacerbating reliance on unverified witness accounts amid junta information restrictions.[5][39] Causal analysis of reported conditions underscores challenges in attributing death solely to torture without medical evidence: Lethwei fighters like Too Too endure high-impact training and bouts, potentially contributing to underlying vulnerabilities such as chronic injuries or organ stress, though no specific pre-detention health data exists publicly.[8] International observers, including Human Rights Watch, document junta facilities' propensity for prolonged isolation and nutritional deprivation, which could independently precipitate decline in a physically compromised individual, yet conflicting narratives persist without adjudication.[37] The military's opacity in disclosing custody logs or medical records for such cases aligns with patterns observed in other detentions, where external probes are barred, rendering definitive causation indeterminate based on available data.[38]Discrepancies in Accounts and Lack of Verification
Reports of Too Too's death emerged in conflicting forms following his detention in May 2022. Initial rumors circulated in April 2023 suggesting he had been shot while attempting to escape custody, though these accounts lacked supporting evidence such as eyewitness testimony or official documentation.[8] In contrast, announcements in July 2023 from Burmese news outlets and social media claimed he had died from torture inflicted by military authorities earlier that month or in April, based on information relayed through friends and family networks, without primary verification like medical records or independent autopsies.[2] Canadian-Burmese fighter Dave Leduc, who had competed against Too Too, referenced "sources close to him" indicating abuse and torture during detention, but provided no further substantiation beyond personal anecdotes shared on social media.[40] The Myanmar military junta issued no public statements confirming or denying the death, contributing to an evidentiary vacuum amid restricted access for journalists and observers in conflict zones. This silence aligns with patterns in the ongoing civil conflict, where opposition-aligned groups such as the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) report casualty figures—including over 4,000 deaths by mid-2023—without third-party audits, raising questions about potential inflation for propaganda purposes in information warfare.[41] The absence of neutral verification mechanisms, including forensic analysis or body release to family (reportedly withheld by authorities), underscores reliance on unvetted activist and exile testimonies, which prioritize narrative alignment over empirical causal chains like documented injuries leading to death. Such gaps foster skepticism toward singular attributions of torture or execution, as competing claims reflect polarized incentives in Myanmar's post-coup environment rather than corroborated facts.[8][41]Legacy and Reception
Impact on Lethwei Community
Dave Leduc, a prominent Lethwei practitioner, publicly mourned Too Too's death in a July 30, 2023, post on X, describing him as "a warrior and a legend of Lethwei" and "one of the toughest guys I have ever fought," emphasizing his resilience in their 2017 bout that ended in a draw.[40] Leduc further noted Too Too's role as the first high-profile opponent to welcome him to the sport in Myanmar, highlighting his contributions to showcasing Lethwei's demanding bare-knuckle format internationally.[42] Aung La Nsang, a Myanmar-born MMA fighter, expressed solidarity with Too Too following his 2022 arrest, recognizing him as a national Lethwei icon whose technical skill and endurance exemplified the sport's rigor.[33] Such tributes from peers underscored Too Too's reputation for prowess in headbutts and clinch work, core elements of Lethwei that distinguish it from gloved disciplines like Muay Thai. The post-2021 political instability in Myanmar has strained the domestic Lethwei scene, with events largely confined to relatively secure regions like Ayeyarwady, where competitions resumed sporadically by late 2023 amid broader disruptions to training and gatherings.[43] This environment contributed to a slowdown in organized fights and talent development, as general emigration trends post-coup affected athletic communities, though Lethwei-specific fighter exodus remains undocumented at scale. Too Too's archived bouts, including international appearances, continue to serve as training resources for aspiring fighters, preserving demonstrations of Lethwei's unyielding traditions—such as no gloves and allowance for knockouts via any limb—despite the sport's high injury rates from strikes and grappling.[2] His career, marked by middleweight dominance, motivates younger athletes to emulate the endurance required in nine-limb combat, sustaining interest even as live events face logistical hurdles.[44]Political Symbolism and Criticisms
Too Too's death in military custody has been leveraged by Myanmar's opposition, including the National Unity Government (NUG) and affiliated activists, to symbolize individual sacrifice against authoritarian rule post-2021 coup. Campaigns such as the 2023 naga tattoo initiative, spearheaded by Aung San Suu Kyi's son Kim Aris, explicitly tribute Too Too as a fighter who "died resisting the junta," channeling funds to support displaced civilians and resistance efforts amid the escalating civil war.[45] This framing casts his protest involvement as emblematic of broader democratic aspirations, aligning with narratives promoted by exile groups and international advocates decrying junta repression.[8] Such depictions face criticism for glossing over the hazardous realities of post-coup mobilization, where initial demonstrations evolved into armed confrontations via People's Defense Forces (PDFs) allied with ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) engaged in decades-long insurgencies. Analysts note that opposition romanticization of figures like Too Too underemphasizes how alignment with these factions—many predating the coup and pursuing separatist agendas—intensified fragmentation risks in a multi-ethnic state already strained by unresolved conflicts.[46] Pro-junta viewpoints, echoed in state media and supporter discourse, frame such participants not as idealistic resisters but as contributors to chaos stemming from the NLD's tenure (2015–2021), during which ethnic peace initiatives faltered, by-elections alienated minorities, and centralization efforts neglected federalist demands, arguably necessitating military intervention to avert balkanization.[47] [48] [49] Reception of Too Too's politicized legacy remains circumscribed, with negligible sway in global discourse beyond selective Western amplification that privileges pro-democracy motifs over Myanmar's internal divisions.[50] Domestically, amid the junta's hold on urban centers and major infrastructure as of 2024, empirical indicators like sustained military recruitment and control of key territories suggest appreciable backing for order-restoration priorities, contrasting opposition claims of near-universal repudiation—claims bolstered by self-reported NUG surveys but undermined by polling challenges in conflict zones.[51] [52] This disparity underscores how external narratives, often sourced from advocacy-aligned outlets, diverge from grounded assessments of a populace navigating ethnic strife and governance vacuums rather than abstract heroism.[53]Records and Accomplishments
Championships Won
Too Too captured the World Lethwei Championship (WLC) middleweight title on November 4, 2017, defeating Michael Badato by decision in the main event of WLC 3: Legendary Champions held in Yangon, Myanmar.[54] He defended the belt once, securing a unanimous decision victory over Ukrainian challenger Vasyl Sorokin.[15] The WLC middleweight crown, often referred to as the 75 kg Golden Belt, represented his primary international accolade in lethwei.[8] Within Myanmar, Too Too was recognized as the nation's preeminent lethwei figure, embodying national champion status through his dominance in domestic bouts and cultural prominence in the sport.[55] No additional major international titles were secured, though his performances established him as a top contender in regional lethwei circuits.[56]Lethwei and Muay Thai Fight Records
Too Too's documented professional Lethwei record, aggregated from promoter reports and fight archives, comprised 39 wins (34 by knockout or technical knockout), 1 loss, and 26 draws across approximately 66 bouts, many of which were unrecorded local fights in Myanmar.[8] Gaps exist due to the informal nature of traditional Burmese bouts, with comprehensive tracking limited to international promotions like the World Lethwei Championship (WLC).| Opponent | Result | Method | Date | Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naimjon Tuhtaboyev | Loss | Unanimous decision | January 31, 2020 | WLC middleweight title bout [56] |
| Vasyl Sorokin | Win | Decision | 2017 | WLC 4 [57] |
| Eddie Farrell | Win | Unanimous decision | December 2016 | WLC 1 [58] |
| Dave Leduc | Draw | Draw after 5 rounds | August 21, 2016 | Myanmar Lethwei World Championship [10] |